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Showing posts with label #ownvoices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #ownvoices. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Finding His Voice: Q&A with the Author of Timestamp: Musings of an Introverted Black Boy Marcus Granderson

 By Margaret Apostolis

Q: Around what age did writing start to spark your interest? 

A: I would probably say sometime in middle school. Around 7th or 8th grade, I started to recognize the fact that there were very few teenage black authors. At about 12 or 13, I solidified the idea that I wanted to produce an advice or self-help type book.  


Q: Was this the driving inspiration behind your journey into writing? Or was there a specific author or novel that was a big inspiration for your work?

A: I never thought I would be a writer growing up. I always said if I knew I was going to be a writer, I would have read a lot more books. I was not the type of kid who was into reading novels; I was more of the article browser in the weekly paper because I invested in catching up on current events. The biggest inspiration behind my work is my ancestors, my personal history as an African American, and my legacy. What I mean by legacy is the art created by black people and how literature, words, and writing, are a form of preservation to sustain, clarify, and capture history through the proper perspective. I like to consider myself a legacy writer: I am writing in the tradition of this legacy as an African American to preserve it, to celebrate it, and to uplift it.  


Q: How did you address this legacy within your debut novel Timestamp: Musings of an Introverted Black Boy

A: The book is inseparable from my heritage and identity as an African-American, which is one part of my identity that I did not fully come into until I went to college. At Harvard, I came of age in every sense of the phrase: physically, emotionally, spiritually, relationally, and racially. During this four-year experience, I truly discovered writing as a medium to process and reflect on my experiences. At the time, however, I did not even realize I was writing the book. I was just writing because I felt inspired to do so. Over time, I soon realized I could use writing to also help others around me who were struggling to come of age, in whatever sense that meant. Which is what ultimately led to this book. So, to put it succinctly, had I never gone to Harvard, Timestamp maybe would not exist. But had I never come of age into my blackness at Harvard, this book would definitely not exist. 


 Q: On the topic of Harvard, were there any experiences you wanted to highlight? 

A: Harvard was a fascinating experience. Harvard was the first time that I reckoned with my racial identity and found myself surrounded by more young black people my age than I had ever in my young adult life. My racial coming of age took place at Harvard because I realized I was black. I mean obviously, I knew I was black, but after I joined the oldest undergraduate black organization at the institution, I truly fell in love with my blackness. The choir Kuumba Singers of Harvard College gave me a legitimate diverse experience and furthered my interest in continuing the legacy discussed further in my novel. My experience attending Harvard and joining the choir sustained me during my four-year journey and ultimately helped with the production of my first novel. 


Q: For my wrap up question, is there any advice you want to give to aspiring or struggling writers?

A: The journey is not an easy one. Even once you are published, you will still get rejections. Second, I think one of the things that I had to realize and encourage authors to understand themselves is that those rejections are not a measure of your value as a writer. If you write something and you believe in it enough to pour your heart and soul into it, then it has value. Believe in the work you are producing. Being published does not equate to value. Don’t ever say, “my work didn’t get published; my work doesn’t matter,” you wrote it. Your work comes from you -- it is a part of you. So, it matters.


About Marcus Granderson:

Marcus Granderson is a podcaster, speaker, and writer based in New York City,  originally from Canton, Michigan.  A 2018 cum laude graduate of Harvard, Marcus created his own interdisciplinary degree curriculum, concentrating on the intersection of rhetoric and oratory. His written work has been featured in Blavity, Medium’s The Start Up, and Eden Magazine. And his debut literary collection, Timestamp: Musings of an Introverted Black Boy, was released in September 2019.

Thursday, October 15, 2020

Q&A With David R. Slayton

Today’s blog will focus on celebrating a new author, David R. Slayton. Software geek by day, fantasy novelist in every other moment! He’s a Denverite who has written the kind of book he craved as a kid in Guthrie, Oklahoma. White Trash Warlock is based on Adam, an outlier in his family, has a power called the Sight. For most of Adam’s life, his gift has been more of a curse. Through a twist of fate, his power ends up being the one thing that can save his family and lead him to his first love. Will Adam be able to overcome insurmountable challenges and learn to work with his power? You have to order White Trash Warlock to find out! It’ just released on October 13th, 2020. This is one story you don’t want to miss!


What inspired you to be a writer?

I grew up in the Oklahoma woods with Star Wars, Star Trek, and Doctor Who. They sparked something in my imagination at a young age. I would escape into my head, wander around the woods and pretend I was on another planet, in another world. I started telling stories with my toys. Sometimes I’d cast them in new roles, and those became my first characters. I’d build forts out of mud and sticks, then later, cities. I’ve always been a world-builder.


Was there any particular moment that was an “ah-ha!” revelation that inspired White Trash Warlock?


I used to live near a hospital that was in the process of demolition. As I walked through it and past it, I imagined a doctor and his wife dealing with something haunting them. That’s pretty much Chapter Two. Adam came later, when I was driving through North Carolina at night, listening to the radio and watching the moonlight break through the trees. There’s more than one reason that Adam’s car is such a part of his identity, but that’s how he started, so he drives a lot.


A lot of authors have quirks that get them into the headspace or groove for writing. Do you have any habits or neurosis that get you in the mood to be creative?

Coffee is a big part of my personal writing ritual. I warm up my brain while it brews listening to the playlist I made for the book or an appropriate video game soundtrack. I also practice dialogue out loud, like a lot, talking to myself, testing the sound of it to find the character’s voice. And I smell everything: food, inanimate objects, etc. I’m always working on getting better, realer details into my books.

I try to tune my feelings to what my characters are feeling, so I’ll relive memories and take notes on how I feel in my body. I like to work a lot with bioenergetics, how we feel things physically, how our bodies react to emotion so sometimes I can emotionally wreck myself by writing a powerful scene.


Your book has an emphasis on LGBT orientation. How has your own personal life influenced the characters and storylines you create?

Like me, Adam is gay, and I wrote White Trash Warlock to be the kind of book I always want to read but can so rarely find.

White Trash Warlock isn’t about the gay experience or gay trauma. It’s not about coming out, or AIDS, dying tragically, or struggling with self-acceptance. Better writers than me have got those covered.

I’ve always wanted books where the main hero just happens to be gay, but the story revolves around something else. It’s not where the conflict comes from. In my epic fantasies it’s not even an issue.

I’m really honored that my acquiring editor at Blackstone, Rick Bleiweiss, saw what I was trying to and wanted a story like that too.


Are you a night owl or a daywalker?

I have a pretty demanding day job, and that means I get up really early to write before I spend all my brain points before the conference calls start. It’s advice I got from Chuck Wendig and Gail Carriger at the Pikes Peak Writers Conference, and it’s made a real difference in my productivity, to treat it like a second job.


What about magic appeals to you?

I mean, the idea that there’s a whole other world just atop or beneath our own, or that the universe might have cheat codes is just so appealing. I think it would add mystery and maybe meaning to our already beautiful, incredible world.

I think many kids who grow up like I did, feeling poor and overwhelmed by the world, wish they had some spell or power to change things and make them better.


If you could have any superpower, what would it be? Why?

Teleportation. I’d love to be able to just snap my fingers and be anywhere in the world, even better if I could take people with me. London for the weekend? No problem.

That or time travel. I’d spend my life just researching history. Combining teleportation AND time travel would be perfect!

I’d bore everyone to tears just popping off to some foreign country or time to really figure out some bit of historical trivia.


Most everyone has one moment in time that they wish they could change. Do you have one of those moments? Would you mind sharing it?


My grandmother was the first person to really encourage my creativity, my imagination. She spoiled me a bit, protected me from my father when she could, and let me be myself. Not long before she died I was back home in Oklahoma. We were shopping at Sears and she saw a red jacket she liked. I was working four jobs at the time, trying to graduate college, and pay as I went. I could have bought it but it would have put me on ramen for a few weeks. Looking back, it would have been worth anything to pay back some of that love and sacrifices she’d shown me and put a smile on her face. I wish more than anything that she’d lived to see me published, for her to know how much she helped me get here.


If you could be any magical creature, what would you be?


Definitely an elf, but one of my elves: immortal, good with a sword, and kind of mischievous while being obsessed with old amusement parks and classic cars. Adam has a difficult relationship with them, but I think they’re pretty neat.


What’s next? Do you have any goals or ambitions you’re chasing right now?


I’m living my lifelong dream, being published and having my book out there. I’m working hard on finishing Adam’s trilogy and my agents are cooking up all sorts of things. I’m so lucky to get to work with Lesley Sabga, the Seymour Agency, and Blackstone. I have a trio of epic fantasy trilogies that I hope we sell soon and a few other urban fantasy ideas I hope readers get to see on the shelf.


About David R. Slayton:

David grew up in Guthrie, Oklahoma, where finding fantasy novels was pretty challenging and finding fantasy novels with diverse characters was downright impossible. Now he lives in Denver, Colorado and write the books he always wanted to read. His debut, White Trash Warlock, will be published in October 13th 2020 by Blackstone Publishing.

Twitter: @drslayton